15. The Good Wife — Jeffrey Dean Morgan is great, but he can only get you so far, and these side diversions over at Lockhart Agos are becoming problematic in that they add so little to the main narrative. That Peter is now running for President while Alicia still works as a bail-court attorney is also eye-rolling. Peter would spend less than 24 hours under the national media microscope before they realized that he wasn’t living with his wife, and that they’ve both been banging other people.

14. Last Man on Earth — Apparently, the way to make Phil/Tandy more likable is just have a handsome, strong, man with common sense and a perfect smile punch him. Who knew?

13. Homeland — This one felt kind of filler-y, too. I do like seeing Saul turn up the Carrie-levels of paranoia.

12. Nathan for You — I like this show. I hate watching it.

11. Life in Pieces — Jordan Peele returned. He was fun.

10. Brooklyn Nine-Nine — I was way to moved by seeing Rosa and Captain Holt crying together.

8. Ash vs. The Evil Dead — It might very well be a monster-of-the-week format, but the episodes are short, very funny, and violently bloody, so I might be OK with the series if it never develops a full-fledged mythology.

6. My Crazy Ex-Girlfriend — As the dust has settled on the new season, this is only one of two new network shows I’ve stuck with until November (the other being Life in Pieces). This week’s episode was the perfect example of why.

5. The Knick — You know what’s really cool about The Knick? You find out cool stuff like the fact that, at the turn of the last century, doctors injected people with malaria in order to fight syphilis (and yes, that is based on actual history).

3. Casual — When Michaela Watkins’ character asked her husband — locked in a garage — why he cheated on her, and he somberly told her the truth? Gut. Punch. (If you’re not watching this show, and you’re a shallow, superficial man, I should note that Eliza Coupe was in this episode, and she spent quite a bit of time very, very naked. Is that reason enough to watch?) (See also: The Best New Show of the Fall is Not on Cable or Netflix)

1. The Leftovers — This episode actually answered some of the questions we’ve had all season long (the deal with the goat, for instance), introduced a new theory (lensing) and gave us maybe the most intense, piercing scene of the year, in the face off between characters played by Carrie Coon and Regina King. When Erika tossed that rock back through Nora’s window, my heart damn near hit the floor. (See also: An Open Letter to Damon Lindelof, Co-Creator of ‘The Leftovers’)

Shows I quit this week: Screem Queens. I watched the first 10 minutes, got interrupted by something shiny, and realized that it just wasn’t worth continuing. Also, The Muppets, until someone tells me that it’s completely turned around.

Dustin is the founder and co-owner of Pajiba. You may email him here or follow him on Twitter.